North Carolina’s offense has spent the offseason looking for answers, and one of the biggest ones may already be in the building.
With training camp less than a month away, the Tar Heels are still sorting through the biggest questions on the roster, starting with the quarterback battle between Billy Edwards Jr., Travis Burgess, and Miles O'Neill. How that competition shakes out will go a long way toward shaping what Bobby Petrino’s offense looks like in 2026-27. Petrino has already made it clear he sees more to work with than last season’s results suggested, and the staff’s aggressive transfer-portal push shows how urgent this reset really is.
That urgency is why the No. 12 player in North Carolina’s top-30 countdown lands on the offensive side of the ball. The Tar Heels needed more playmakers, and they went out and got one in Lehigh transfer wide receiver Humphrey.
Humphrey was one of the most explosive receivers in the country last season. In 2025, the 6-foot-4, 215-pound wideout caught 35 passes for 651 yards and four touchdowns, averaging 18.6 yards per catch. That kind of downfield juice was missing from North Carolina’s offense a year ago, when the unit too often looked flat and easy to defend.
Even with Gio Lopez starting at quarterback and the offense struggling to find rhythm, Humphrey brings a profile that can change the feel of the passing game fast. He can win at the catch point, make up for off-target throws, and give the Tar Heels a receiver who can consistently threaten defenses vertically.
He also gives North Carolina something it badly needed behind Jordan Shipp. Shipp carried a heavy load in Bill Belichick’s first season in Chapel Hill, and Humphrey should take some of that burden off his shoulders. At the same time, his presence should create more room for Shipp, Trech Kekahuna, and Jaxxon Warren to operate underneath and in the intermediate areas.
The appeal goes beyond raw production. Humphrey’s route-running and physical style fit what North Carolina is trying to build, and his speed should force defensive backs to respect the deep ball. In a Petrino offense that should be more favorable to receivers, that combination could make Humphrey one of the most important additions on the roster.
North Carolina brought him in early for a reason. The Tar Heels wanted a receiver who could change the math for the entire offense, and Humphrey looks built to do exactly that.
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Hubert Davis Finally Addressed The Caleb Wilson Debate UNC Fans Feared
Caleb Wilsons strong showing in NBA Summer League has only sharpened the conversation around what kind of pro he can become, and it has also kept his North Carolina exit in the spotlight. Hubert Davis has been clear that he is proud of Wilsons progress, praising the forwards character and competitiveness while pointing to the kind of growth that has made him look like a future NBA player.
Wilsons earlier comments about his role at North Carolina not emphasizing three-point shooting have lingered in the background, feeding a broader debate about coaching and player development. Davis, for his part, has tried to keep the focus on Wilsons talent and trajectory rather than any lingering tension, which is why the subject still feels like one Tar Heels fans will keep circling until it is fully settled. [Read more 🡒]
Did Drake Powell Leave UNC Before His Offense Was Ready
Drake Powells first summer as a pro has looked a lot like the version of him that made him such an intriguing draft pick in the first place: long, explosive and disruptive on defense. The rookie taken 22nd overall has flashed the athleticism that made him a first-rounder, but his offensive game is still very much a work in progress, and that showed up again during NBA Summer League.
A recent 18-point outing offered a reminder of what Powell can do when the shot is falling, but it did not erase the bigger concern around his comfort level as a scorer. He still looks uneasy putting the ball on the floor and creating against a defender, which is why the question lingers for North Carolina fans: would another year in Chapel Hill, with a bigger role and more offensive reps, have helped him arrive in the league more ready for the next step? [Read more 🡒]
